The Boston area got just about 5 inches of snowfall following the winter storm Sunday night into Monday morning, according to National Weather Service reports.
Boston is in for a bout of intense winter weather this week, according to National Weather Service forecasts, starting with a dump of snow through Monday morning and continuing with a period of
A quick-hitting snowstorm​ hit most of Massachusetts Sunday night into Monday before an arctic blast of air arrives on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Boston's freezing temperatures are expected to begin to recover on Thursday with daytime highs rising into the 20s.
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu has declared a cold weather advisory in the city through Thursday due to arctic temperatures in the forecast.
Yes. Although this blast of Arctic air sweeping the nation has thrown Bostonians scrounging through closets to find hats, gloves, and that extra-puffy coat, the fact is that the climate is still getting warmer.
Boston is in for more chilly temperatures but a fairly dry spell in the upcoming week, according to National Weather Service forecasts.
Wind chill reached 49 degrees below zero this week with over 100 mile-per-hour winds at the Mount Washington Observatory.
It wasn't a blockbuster storm, but many communities in Massachusetts find themselves clearing snow that fell Sunday into Monday.
Many Massachusetts residents woke up to blankets of white Monday morning after several inches of snow fell across the state overnight. The National Weather Service's Boston office issued snowfall totals showing upwards of five inches across much of Massachusetts, with some areas getting more or less accumulation.
Boston and the rest of New England have been dealing with well below-average temperatures, in some cases falling 20 degrees, as an expansive mass of Arctic air spreads across the eastern half of the United States. This cold surge is making our region this week feel colder than Anchorage, Alaska, which is topping out at 36 degrees.
Just how cold did it get on Wednesday? Here's a look at which communities measured the most frigid temperatures.